Summary

Almeida is best known for large-scale photographs that document the artist’s mapping of her own body and her studio, such as Inhabited Canvas 1976 (Tate P80033). These works, many of which feature overpainting or other interventions, show the artist in various poses and gestures. For over forty years she has deliberately interrogated the boundaries of the various artistic disciplines she employs, including drawing, painting and photography. In several key early works she used a stretched canvas as an item of clothing, literally inhabiting a painting. In later works photographic images are partly occluded by washes of paint with which the photographic representation of the artist seems to be interacting.

Almeida has made drawings throughout her career, but she only began showing them as artworks in the mid-2000s. She was initially reticent to expose this aspect of her practice because she has always thought of drawing as a preliminary process in the creation of the photographic and video works for which she is better known. Her drawings are sketches outlining ideas for physical actions she will undertake and document in her studio. Curator and writer Delfim Sardo has described the role of drawing in Almeida’s practice as follows:

[In] the studio, Helena Almeida starts off by drawing; her thoughts are on drawing. At the drawing board, on those faceless, historyless A4 sheets, the artist places the first burst of a gesture, of the position or action which she will then test in the area of the studio where the first video recording is done, followed by the photo shoot. Thus, drawing acts as an inner methodology for the artist’s creative practice … They are notes, traces of gestures, actions and situations the artist will eventually create if she decides to do so.(Delfim Sardo, ‘The Atlas: Helena Almeida and the Uses of Drawing’, in Galeria Filomena Soares 2006, unpaginated.)

These thirty-eight drawings made in 1995–9 relate specifically to Almeida’s later projects. The images of hands led to a series of photographic works with the title Drawing (Desenho) 1999 (artist’s collection, La Fábrica, Madrid, and 9Arte, Barcelona). Drawings in which the figure of the artist is seen lifting up the side of her skirt to reveal her legs, and close-ups of her lower body dressed in a skirt with one leg coquettishly posed against the other, relate to the photographic series Seduce (Seduzir) 2002 (private collection). The connection to these series of photographs is apparent, yet the drawings have a distinct quality that is their own. The emphasis on hands in many of the drawings is significant, as Almeida has professed a particular interest in the body’s extremities: ‘We look at the body and see that it ends abruptly at the feet and the hands. It finishes there. There’s nothing more – it’s like the edge of a cliff overlooking the sea.’ (Quoted in Peggy Phelan, ‘Helena Almeida: The Interior of Us’, in Fundación Telefónica 2008, p.312.)